La-Based Perovskite Oxide Catalysts for Alkaline Oxygen Reduction: The Importance of Electrochemical Stability
Jeesoo Seok, Andrés Molina Villarino, Zixiao Shi, Yao Yang, Mahdi Ahmadi, David A. Muller, Francis J. DiSalvo, Héctor D. Abruña
Abstract
Alkaline fuel cells represent a promising energy conversion technology since they enable the use of precious metal-free electrocatalysts for the oxygen reduction reaction. Among these, La-based perovskite oxides, with great compositional and structural tunability, are especially attractive. However, we believe that the current literature lacks a thorough understanding of their inherent (in)stability issues. Here, we report on nine La-based perovskite oxide electrocatalysts for the oxygen reduction reaction, including LaMO3 (M = Mn, Co, Ni) and LaCoxM1–xO3 (M = Mn, Ni; x = 0.9, 0.5, 0.1). While some exhibited initial promising activity, they all degraded significantly, even after brief electrochemical testing. Through comprehensive structural characterization of LaCo0.9Mn0.1O3, particularly scanning transmission electron microscopy, we found evidence to support a degradation mechanism in which the B-site cation species irreversibly leach from the perovskite under testing conditions. A sample cycled 10 000 times from +0.4 to +1.2 V vs reversible hydrogen electrode (RHE) showed an amorphous La oxide shell 1–2 nm thick. Bulk analyses showed that B-site leaching also occurs for samples soaked in 1 M KOH or pure EtOH. The mechanistic insights provided here should help inform the future design of La-based perovskite oxide electrocatalysts for alkaline fuel cells and stress the importance of stability metrics validating claims of promising electrocatalytic activity.